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Word: scoopings (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...month. This past week the nominee list for the Eisners was announced. Inevitably everyone will wonder how certain things got left off and certain things got on. I can tell you because I was tapped as one of the judges for this year's Eisners. Here is the inside scoop, behind the green door of the self-proclaimed "Oscars" of the industry...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ...Just to be Nominated | 4/18/2003 | See Source »

...have already seen more of Gulf War II than we did of all of Gulf War I. The best known TV scoop of the 1991 war was essentially radio: CNN's Bernard Shaw, Peter Arnett and John Holliman describing the air attack on an audio line while the network broadcast their photographs over a map of Iraq. In sheer visual terms, last week's telecasts--with digital-age 3D animations, live interviews from the middle of an invasion and space-agey dispatches by videophone--were to their predecessor as Grand Theft Auto is to Pong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Real Battles In Real Time | 3/31/2003 | See Source »

...pure uranium, with pockets as concentrated as 80%, far richer than the typical 1% deposits at other mines. The ore at McArthur River is the richest in the world and is far too radioactive to handle conventionally; the miners extract it by remote control, using giant boring machines and scoop trams instead of pickaxes and shovels...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Energy: Nuclear Rock | 2/24/2003 | See Source »

...recent winter day, more than 2,000 ft. below the surface of the McArthur River mine, Dale Powder operated a scoop tram from a niche in the rock wall 100 ft. or so from the vehicle. He wore a hard hat and rubber boots, a radiation detector and a shoulder harness with a pair of joysticks that he manipulated through his heavy work gloves. The scoop tram looked like a dump truck with the cab lopped off. On solid-rubber tires 5 ft. high, it carried freshly mined ore in soccer-ball-size chunks to the "grizzly," the big grated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Energy: Nuclear Rock | 2/24/2003 | See Source »

...removed and a 10-ton, 10-ft.-wide reamer with tungsten-carbide teeth is attached. At the upper level, a raisebore machine pulls the rotating reamer slowly upward, carving out a much bigger hole. As the reamer climbs, ore tumbles down the shaft to the lower level, where the scoop tram waits. Once its bucket is full, an operator maneuvers the tram to a scanning station, where the purity of the load is analyzed, and then to the grizzly, where the ore is dumped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Energy: Nuclear Rock | 2/24/2003 | See Source »

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